The white tiger

342 pages

English language

Published April 15, 2009 by Atlantic.

ISBN:
978-1-84887-193-9
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
806325263

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(11 reviews)

9 editions

A very entertaining novel

I know I read The White Tiger soon after it came out in paperback and my OH bought a copy from Waterstones. It's even got a rating on my Goodreads. Unusually for me though, reading the synopsis brought back absolutely no memories of the story and I didn't have a single deja vu moment throughout this re-reading. I'm not sure what that says about the book. Obviously I got to enjoy it this time around without suddenly realising that I knew how it would all end, but I wonder whether it wil fade from my memory so completely second time around!

For what essentially is a murderer's confession, The White Tiger is very funny. There is frequent dry humour covering all aspects of Indian life from well-known stereotype characters to unexpected scenarios and I liked Balram's voice which is convincing and sympathetically portrayed. Adiga does highlight disturbing moments of extreme …

Review of 'White Tiger' on 'Storygraph'

A “there-there” kind of muck, de-stenched just like the filmed sewage so we can see but not be so visceral as to feel.

Review of 'The White Tiger' on 'Goodreads'

"Why can't [insert country here] get their act together? It's so simple! If only they would [insert solution] ..." We've all thought that some time, about some country or another.

It should be so simple! Adiga shows, vividly, why it's not. His depiction of modern-day India shows the cultural stasis, class boundaries, corruption, resentment that shapes its people and all their interactions. The image of broken manacles is a frequent ironic motif. As a child of a different third-world country, I found myself nodding in recognition at the world he describes. So many possibilities, so tragically limited by its own people. I wonder what first-worlders will think of the world he describes?

I've never read Fukuyama's [b:Trust|57980|Trust The Social Virtues and The Creation of Prosperity|Francis Fukuyama|http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51djbFJ7b%2BL.SL75.jpg|56475], but I think it's time for me to do so now. I expect to find many parallels.

(Oh, a note about the …

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Subjects

  • Poor
  • Fiction
  • Ambition
  • Social conditions

Places

  • India
  • Delhi (India)
  • Delhi